'But?'
Allison looked down, then seemed to force herself to face Lilith again. 'There isn't any nice way of saying this, but I've got to ask. Are you really human?'
Lilith stared at her, tried to raise indignation, but managed only weariness. How many times would she have to answer that question? And why did she bother? Would her words ease anyone's suspicions?
'This would be so goddamn much easier if I weren't human,' she said. 'Think about it. If I weren't human, why the hell would I care whether you got raped?'
She turned Once more toward her room, then stopped, turned back, remembering. 'I'm Awakening ten more people tomorrow. The final ten.'
12
There was a shuffling of people. Some avoided Lilith because they were afraid of her-afraid she was not human, or not human enough. Others came to her because they believed that she would win. They did not know what that would mean, but they thought it would be better to be with her than to have her as an enemy.
Her core group, Joseph, Tate and Gabriel, Leah and Wray did not change. Peter's core group shifted. Victor was added. He was a strong personality and he had been Awake longer than most people. That encouraged a few of the newer people to follow him.
Peter himself was replaced by Curt. Peter's broken arm kept him quiet, sullen, and usually alone in his room. Curt was brighter and more physically impressive anyway. He would probably have led the group from the first if he had moved a little faster.
Peter's arm remained broken, swollen, painful and useless for two days. On the night of the second day, he was healed. He slept late, missed breakfast, but when he awoke, his arm was no longer broken-and he was a badly frightened man. He could not simply pass off two days of debilitating pain as illusion or trickery. The bones of his arm had been broken, and badly broken. Everyone who looked at it had seen the displacement, the swelling, the discoloration. Everyone had seen that he could not use his hand.
Now everyone saw a whole arm, undistorted, normal, and a hand that worked easily and well. Peter's own people looked askance at him.
Following lunch on the day of his healing, Lilith told the people carefully censored stories of her life among the Oankali. Peter did not stay to listen.
'You need to hear these things more than the others do,' she told him later. 'The Oankali will be a shock even if you're prepared. They fixed your arm while you were asleep because they didn't want you terrified and fighting them while they tried to help you.'
'Tell them how grateful I am,' he muttered.
'They want sanity, not gratitude,' she said. 'They want-and I want-you to be bright enough to survive.'
He stared at her with contempt so great that it made his face almost unrecognizable.
She shook her head, spoke softly. 'I hurt you because you were trying to hurt another person. No one else has hurt you at all. The Oankali have saved your life. Eventually, they'll send you back to Earth to make a new life for yourself.' She paused. 'A little thought, Pete. A little sanity.'
She got up to leave him. He said nothing to her, only watched her with hatred and contempt. 'Now there are forty-three of us,' she said. 'The Oankali could show themselves anytime. Don't do anything that will make them keep you here alone.'
She left him, hoping he would begin to think. Hoping, but not believing.
Five days after Peter's healing, the evening meal was drugged.
Lilith was not warned. She ate with the others, sitting off to one side with Joseph. She was aware as she ate of growing relaxation, a particular kind of comfort that made her think of- She sat up straight. What she felt now she had felt before only when she was with Nikanj, when it had established a neural link with her.
And the sweet fog of anticipation dissipated. Her body seemed to shrug it off and she was alert again. Nearby, other people still spoke to one another, laughing a little more than they had before. Laughter had never quite disappeared from the group, though at times it had been rare. There had been more fighting, more bed-hopping and less laughter for the past few days.
Now men and women had begun to hold hands, to sit closer to one another. They slipped arms around one another and sat together probably feeling better than they had since they had been Awakened. It was unlikely that any of them could shake off the feeling the way Lilith had. No ooloi had modified them.
She looked around to see whether the Oankali were coming in yet. There was no sign of them. She turned to Joseph who was sitting next to her frowning.
'Joe?'
He looked at her. The frown smoothed away and he reached for her.
She let him draw her closer, then spoke into his ear. 'The Oankali are about to come in. We've been drugged.'
He shook off the drug. 'I thought. . .' He rubbed his face. '1 thought something was wrong.' He breathed deeply, then looked around. 'There,' he said softly.
She followed the direction of his gaze and saw that the wall between the food cabinets was rippling, opening. In at least eight places, Oankali were coming in.
'Oh no,' Joseph said, stiffening, looking away. 'Why didn't you leave me comfortably drugged?'
'Sorry,' she said, and rested her hand on his arm. He had had only one brief experience with one Oankali. Whatever happened might be almost as hard on him as it was on the others. 'You're modified,' she said. 'I don't think the drug could have held you once things got interesting.'
More Oankali came through the openings. Lilith counted twenty-eight altogether. Would that be enough to handle forty-three terrified humans when the drug wore off?
People seemed to react to the nonhuman presence in slow motion. Tate and Gabriel stood up together, leaning